2nd US Case of MERS Reported in Orlando

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Editor's note: This article was updated at
4:15 pm ET with new information from a CDC news conference.

A person who traveled from Saudi Arabia to Orlando, Florida, has
become the second patient in the United States reported to be
sick with a relatively new and deadly virus known as Middle East
Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention announced today (May 12).

The patient, a health care worker who lives and works in Saudi
Arabia, flew from Jeddah to London on May 1, the CDC said. From
there, the patient flew to Boston and then to Atlanta, and
finally to Orlando, where the patient was admitted to the
emergency department on May 9.

The patient began feeling unwell on the initial flight to London,
and later experienced symptoms during travel, including fever,
chills and a slight cough, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, assistant
surgeon general of the U.S. and director of the CDC's National
Center for Immunizations and Respiratory Diseases. [ 5
Most Likely Real-Life Contagions ]

The announcement follows the news earlier this month of the
first case of MERS in the U.S., in a man who traveled from
Saudi Arabia to Chicago, and took a bus to Indiana. That patient
was released from the hospital last week. The two cases are not
linked, CDC officials said.

The news of a second case is "unwelcomed, but not unexpected,"
said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC, who stressed that the
risk of MERS to the general public from the infected person is
extremely low. Transmission requires close contact, and most
cases of human-to-human transmission have occurred in people who
cared for those who were sick, Frieden said.

But to be extra cautious, the CDC is in the process of notifying
more than 500 people who may have had contact with the Orlando
patient during travel, Frieden said at a news conference today.

Since it was first detected in 2012, MERS coronavirus has
infected more than 530 people worldwide, and most cases have been
in Saudi Arabia, Schuchat said. About 30 percent of those
infected have died.

The CDC does not recommend that anyone change their travel plans
at this time, Schuchat said. General recommendations for
preventing respiratory infections include washing hands often,
avoiding close contact with people who are sick, and avoiding
touching the eyes, nose and mouth with unwashed hands, Schuchat
said.

People who develop fever and cough or shortness of breath within
two weeks of traveling to countries in or near the Arabian
Peninsula should see their doctor, the CDC says.

The time between someone's exposure to the virus and when he or
she becomes sick is usually about five days, and 14 days at the
most, Schuchat said.